parenting and neuroscience
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Parenting and neuroscience 1
Aping Mankind: Neuromania, Darwinitis and the
Misrepresentation of HumanityRaymond Tallis
Monitoring Parents: Science, Evidence, Experts and the New Parenting Culture
Parenting and neuroscience 2
That we are not responsible for our behaviour: ‘my brain makes me do it’
That it has show the early experience is crucial because its consequences are hard-wired into us
That neuroscience can guide social policies That we can look beyond the politics of ‘left’
and ‘right’ to the politics of left brain and right brain
Neuroscience Has Shown
Parenting and neuroscience 3
Summa contra Biologism
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The belief that human beings are essentially biological organisms and that they are best understood through the biological sciences
The humanities should aspire to be ‘animalities’
Biologism
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A conscious agent
An organism, a piece of living matter
Two Ways of Seeing a Human Being
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Advances in the scientific understanding of the organism H. sapiens
The assumption that the only alternative to a supernatural account of humanity is a naturalistic one
Behind the Rise of Biologism
Parenting and neuroscience 7
We are not identical with our bodies understood as animal organisms
We are embodied subjects who have many different relationships to our body: being, having, using, taking care of, judging, interpreting, factually knowing
We are ‘extra-natural’ – both a part of nature and apart from it
Against Biologism
Parenting and neuroscience 8
Neuromania
Darwinitis
The Two Pillars of Unwisdom
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Human consciousness is identical with neural activity in the human brain
‘I am my (you are your) brain’
Neuromania (1)
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The brain explains every aspect of awareness and behaviour
To understand human beings, you must peer into the intracranial darkness using the techniques of neuroscience
Neuromania (2)
Parenting and neuroscience 11
‘The Fast-acting Solvent of the Critical Faculties’
Parenting and neuroscience 12
Love
Wisdom
Sense of beauty
Wanna Know About…?
Parenting and neuroscience 13
An inflamed or pathological version of Darwinism
Asserts that evolutionary theory explains not only how the organism H. sapiens arose but also the nature of people like you and me
Darwinitis (1)
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Evolutionary forces – natural selection, survival advantage – explain the origin and purpose of human behaviour and human institutions
All is forged in or indirectly relates to the blood bath in which the gene is shaped by differential survival
The processes that produced Mozart were those that produced millipedes
Darwinitis (2)
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Darwinism encompasses not only the biological roots (of the human organism) but the cultural leaves (of the human person)
Darwinitis in Brief
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The brain is an evolved organ
‘Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution’ Theodosius Dobzhansky The neural explanation of human consciousness therefore demands a Darwinian interpretation of our behaviour.
The Link between Neuromania and Darwinitis
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The human brain is a machine which alone accounts for all our actions, our most private thoughts, our beliefs…All our actions are products of the activity of our brains. It makes no sense (in scientific terms) to try to distinguish sharply between acts that result from conscious attention and those that result from our reflexes or are caused by disease or damage to the brain. The Mechanics of Mind
Colin Blakemore
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Passive: in the grip of biological forces which boil down to physical forces
Ignorant: unaware of the reasons for his/her actions
Not a conscious agent
The Image of Humanity
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Absorbed into nature rather than offset from it
A material part of the material world
Wired into the forces of physical nature
Unfree
Biologised Humanity
The Humanities Welcome the Occupying Forces
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‘[T]he humanities, ranging from philosophy and history to moral reasoning, comparative religion, and interpretation of the arts, will draw closer to the sciences and partly fuse with them’ EO Wilson
The Prophet of the Humanities become Animalities
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[T]otal Consilience holds that nature is organised by simple universal laws of physics to which all other laws and principles can eventually be reduced.
EO Wilson Consilience. The Unity of Knowledge 1998),
Physics the Final Destination of the Humanities
Some Half-Way Houses (1)
Neuro-aesthetics: Neural explanation of creativity and aesthetic pleasure
Darwinian aesthetics: evolutionary explanations of artistic creation and appreciation
Neuro-law – brain science and ‘biological justice’
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Neuro-economics: brain science explains unwise purchases
Evolutionary economics: conspicuous consumption advertises genetic health (‘peacock’s tail)
Neuropolitics – replace arguments over left versus right with looking at the balance between left and right hemisphere
Neuro-theology: God is a tingle in the ‘God-spot’ in the brain
Evolutionary theology: religious belief is genetically implanted in us to maximise inclusive fitness
Some Half-Way Houses (2)
Royal Institution 25
The sum of an organism’s classical fitness (how many of its own offspring it produces and supports) and the number of equivalents of its own offspring it can add to the population by supporting or cooperating with others.
Inclusive Fitness
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Camilla Batmanghelidgh
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Seems to have excellent results
Now wants to do brain scans to see if the changes are ‘real’
It works in practice but does it work in theory?
Camilla Batmanghelidgh
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The thought that I am going to die makes me very miserable but that does not prove I must be immortal.
‘Yuk’ is not an argument
The Palatable and the True
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Neuromania
Darwinitis
Critique
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Logical: the conceptual muddle
Empirical: current methodological limits of neuroscience
Logical/Empirical: the future limits of neuroscience
Problems with Neuromania
31
The Central Muddle
While to live a human life requires a brain in some kind of working order, it does not follow from this that living a human life is to be a brain in some kind of working order.
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32
My position (2)
Neuroscience reveals some of the most important necessary conditions of behaviour and awareness.
Neuromania holds that it will give a complete account of the sufficient conditions of awareness and behaviour.
Parenting and neuroscience
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The correlation between neural activity and consciousness means that neural activity is consciousness.
The Fundamental Error of Neuromania
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‘Evidence’ that our deepest and most complex feelings are identical with activity in the brain (Barthels, Zeki)
‘Evidence’ that our brains are calling the shots (Libet, Soon)
Empirical Problems with Neuromania: Exemplary Cases
Parenting and neuroscience 35
Andreas Bartels and Semi Zeki ‘The Neural Basis of Romantic Love’ NeuroReport 2001 11: 3829-3834
The Secret of Love (Romantic)
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Place head of subject (attached to body) in fMRI scan
Record responses to pictures of the beloved and pictures of mere friends
Subtract brain activity of latter from former Repeat many times on many subjects
Finding the Secret of Love
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Love (romantic) is due to activity in a highly restricted area of the brain: ‘in the medial insula and the anterior cingulate cortex and, sub cortically, in the caudate nucleus and the putamen, all bilaterally’.
What, Then, is Love?
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What, Then, is Love?
Parenting and neuroscience 39
Not like a response to a simple stimulus such as a picture.
Not even a single enduring state, like being cold.
A many-splendoured and many-miseried thing
What is Love?A Primer for Martians and Neuromaniacs (1)
Parenting and neuroscience 40
Not feeling in love at that moment Hunger for, simulated indifference to, delight
over the beloved Wanting to be kind to, wanting to impress the
Special Other Lust, awe, surprise, joy, guilt, anger, jealousy. Imagining conversations, events; Speculating what the loved one is doing,
feeling
Love: A Primerfor Martians and Neuromaniacs (2)
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Not simply a property of part of an organ (brain)
It is not simply a property of an organism as a whole
It belongs to a self that relates to a community of minds
Love
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Reduce it to a response to a stimulus
Take it out of the community of minds/selves and stuff it back into the intracranial darkness
How to Neuralise Love Etc
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Vul, E., Harris C., Winklielan, P., & Pashler, H. ‘Puzzlingly high correlations in fMRI studies of emotion, personality, and social cognition’ Perspectives on Psychological Science 2009; 4(3): 274-290[Originally called ‘Voodoo Correlations in Social Neuroscience’]
Rumblings of Doubt
Parenting and neuroscience 44
Libet, B ‘Unconscious Cerebral Initiative and the Role of Conscious Will in Voluntary Action’ Behavioural and Brain Sciences 1985; 8: 529-566.
‘one of the philosophically most challenging studies.. in modern scientific psychology Haggard, P. and Eimer, M. 1999 ‘On the relation between brain potentials and voluntary movement’ Experimental Brain Research 126: 128-133.
Neurodeterminism (1)
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Subjects asked to flex wrist or digit Time the Readiness Potential (RP) Subjective timing of forming intention
RP precedes the timing of awareness of intention
Libet’s Experiment
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Chung Siong Soon, Marcel Brass, Hans-Jochen Heinze, John-Dylan Hayes ‘Unconscious determinants of free decisions in the human brain’ Nature Neuroscience (2008); 11: 543-545.A network of control areas ‘that begins to prepare a decision long before it enters awareness’.
Neurodeterminism (2)
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We don’t know what we are doing until we have found that we have done it.
Conclusion from Libet/Soon
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‘The only connexion between willing and acting is that both come from the same unconscious source’.
Daniel Wegner The Illusion of Conscious Will Cambridge MA: The MIT Press, 2002)
Neurodeterminism (3) Unconscious Influences on Behaviour
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Simple action Only a small component of a bigger action
The story of the action begins much earlier
Critique of Libet/Soon (1)
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Action reduced to atoms of movement
Context stripped off Overlooks that intention is a field Ignores the human world Removes the very conditions that make the experiments possible
Critique of Libet/Soon (2)
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Neural activity is consciousness (and the origin of behaviour)
Key Assumption
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When we are talking about the brain, we are talking about a piece of matter subject to the laws of physics
The Neuroscientistic Orthodoxy
The Neuroscientistic Orthodoxy There is only one sort of stuff, namely matter –
the physical stuff of physics, chemistry and physiology – and the mind is somehow nothing but a physical phenomenon. In short, the mind is the brain… We can (in principle!) account for every mental phenomenon using the same physical principles, laws and raw materials that suffice to explain radioactivity, continental drift, photosynthesis, reproduction, nutrition and growth.
Daniel Dennett Consciousness Explained
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If we have serious problems understanding the relationship between brain and even ground floor consciousness it is absurd to look to brain science to cast light on the upper storeys of human consciousness.
Central Message
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The Ground Floor: Perception of an Object
56
The mystery of intentionality: Perception
Parenting and neuroscience
Glass
“Glass”
Neural activity
Identity
Perception
Light as Cause
Intentionality of gaze
57
Limitations of the Physiology of Visual Perception
The inward causal chain explains how the light gets into my brain but not how this results in a gaze that looks out.
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The mystery of intentionality
Parenting and neuroscience
Glass
“Glass”
Neural activity
Identity
Perception
Light as Cause
Intentionality of gaze
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My perception of the glass would require the neural activity in the visual cortex to reach causally upstream to the events that caused them.
The Mystery of Intentionality if Neuromania Were True
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Tears the hitherto seamless fabric of a causally closed material world
The seed out of which grows first-person being (unique to humans)
And freedom And the community of minds And the human world – the semiosphere All beyond the reach of neuroscience
Intentionality: More Than Meets the Eye
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It creates the possibility of an ever-widening gap between the conscious individual and the material world
This possibility is realised in humans who are not simply organisms but embodied subjects
The Significance of Intentionality (1)
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The emergence of awareness of the form ‘That such-and-such is the case’
Humans are not just immersed in matter but are surrounded by ‘Thatter’ most clearly expressed in factual knowledge
The Significance of Intentionality (2)
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It requires that the interaction between two material objects – the glass and my brain – should cause the one to appear to the other.
Neuromania in Trouble
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The progressive enclosure of the world within the framework of physical science tends towards the elimination or disappearance of (phenomenal) appearance
Physical Science: The Disappearance of Appearance
65
Physical Science: The Disappearance of Appearance
Replacement of phenomenal appearance by measurements
Drift from the phenomena of subjective consciousness a realm of abstract, general quantitative terms.
The elimination of ‘secondary qualities’ (Galileo, John Locke)
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The Disappearance of Appearance. The Bottom Line
Nothing in physical science can explain why a physical object such as a brain should find, uncover, or create, appearances and, in particular, secondary qualities, in the world.
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Matter does not generate viewpoints
The Bottom Line
68
The Phenomenal Appearance of a Rock from No Viewpoint
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The Material World as Revealed by a Piece of the Material World
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The Gaze of Physics
Subjects (Selves, Persons)
Unity-in-multiplicity
Temporal depth
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Unity-in Multiplicity of Consciousness
We are co-conscious of many separate things in a conscious field
Models of integration do not deliver unity-in-multiplicity - i.e. merging without mushing
Models of binding do not deliver unity never mind unity-in-multiplicity
Parenting and neuroscience 72
Subjects (Selves, Persons)
Unity-in-multiplicity
Temporal depth
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Neurophysiology of Memory
Memory as a cerebral deposit
‘Stored’ in the form of the altered reactivity of the brain
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Critique of Neurophysiology of Memory
Do not capture important modes of memory e.g. autobiographical memory
The past states of a material object cannot be retained in the present state of a material object
Memories are explicitly of the past. Tensed time not evident in the material
world
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Einstein on Tensed Time
Physicists know that the distinction between past, present and future, is only a stubbornly persistent illusion. Einstein, 1952
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Neuromania
Darwinitis
Critique
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Feeding behaviour
Learning behaviour
The Distance between Man and Beast
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Feeding behaviour
Learning behaviour
The Distance between Man and Beast
Between Human and Animal Feeding
Cooking Time-regulated eating The structure of meals Meals as festivals Table ware Food miles People miles Money
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Feeding behaviour
Learning behaviour
The Distance between Man and Beast
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It is something that is done rather than merely happening
Involves practising Involves teaching Is mediated by institutions Includes acquisition of knowledge Is part of a life narrative
Learning in Humans
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Woven out of shared/joined attention A ‘semiosphere’ Woven out of a trillion cognitive
handshakes A public domain that transcends the
organism H sapiens Constructed over 100s of 1000’s of years This is how far Darwinitis is out of date
The Human World
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Man: Reminders for Martians (1)
We guide, justify, and excuse our behaviour according to general and abstract principles
We create cities, laws, institutions
We entertain theories about our own nature and about the world
◦
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We frame our individual lives within a shared history
We systematically inquire into the order of things and the patterns of causation and physical laws that seem to underpin that order.
Man: Reminders for Martians (2)
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Lead our lives rather than merely organically live them
Live out narratives based on an elaborate sense of possibility
Conscious of ourselves Conscious of other selves Conscious of the material world and its
intrinsic existence and properties
Man: The Explicit Animal
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‘Humanity transcends apehood to the same degree by which life transcends mundane chemistry and physics’.
VS Ramachandran The Tell-Tale Brain. A Neuroscientist’s Quest for What Makes Us Human 2011
Distance from Our Nearest Animal Kin
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Language Misplaced sense of honesty Thinking that Darwinism requires it of us
Confusing organisms and people
Why We Avoid Seeing the Obvious
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We personify the brain – it ‘decides’, it ‘signals’, it ‘judges’ etc
So we can ‘brainify’ the person
The Power of Words
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Biology is the key to understanding human nature
We are best understood as (largely) unconscious or programmed organism operating in a natural world
We are not best understood as conscious agents acting in a uniquely human world
The humanities are biological sciences in a primitive state of development
Biologism
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The gap between humans and non-human animals elided
Even higher level awareness reduced to the properties of living matter
The assumption of a fundamental difference between human actions and other events in the world looks shaky
The personless laws of the physical world encroach upon, engulf and digest humanity
Consequences of Biologism(if taken seriously)
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Neuromania Darwinitis
The Proper Home of the Pillars of Unwisdom
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‘I hear the tortoise of time explode in the micro-wave of eternity’
The End Is in Sight
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The Silent Acorn: The Brain
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The Whispering Wood: The Community of Minds
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Trying to find the community of minds, forged from a trillion cognitive handshakes, in bits of the stand-alone brain lighting up in the intracranial darkness.
The Quintessence of Neuromania
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I am not against biological science. I do not have a religious agenda – I am an atheist humanist
I accept Darwin’s theory is beyond reasonable doubt
I am not a Creationist Nutter I am not a dualist: man is not a ghost in a machine
To Head off Misunderstanding
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A Hard-Wired Politician?
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Man need not be degraded to a machine by being denied to be a ghost in a machine. He might, after all, be a sort of animal, namely a higher mammal. There has yet to be ventured the hazardous leap to the hypothesis that perhaps he is man.
Gilbert Ryle The Concept of Mind
A Hazardous Leap